The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Trade tensions could disrupt supply of chip equipment

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TAIPEI: Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co, the world’s largest contract chipmaker, warned for the first time that trade tensions may disrupt its access to key production equipment and hit its operations, amid increasing friction between the US and China.

The company, which produces semiconduc­tors for Apple Inc and other major global tech companies, said in its annual report released on Friday that “ongoing trade tensions or protection­ist measures could result in increased prices for, or even unavailabi­lity of, key equipment.” It pointed to factors such as delays or denials of export licenses, additional export control measures, and other tariff or non-tariff barriers.

TSMC relies on equipment from US suppliers including Applied Materials Inc and Lam Research Corp for production. The company said trade tensions could also prevent it from securing raw materials required for production, repeating a point it mentioned in the previous annual report.

Semiconduc­tors have become a key area of increasing Us-china competitio­n with chips used in a wide range of products from missiles and cars to smartphone­s.

China is eager to foster a domestic semiconduc­tor industry to cut its reliance on foreign technology as the US tightens control on chip-related exports to the Asian country, including key equipment sales to Chinese chipmaker Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp.

Earlier this week, two US Republican lawmakers - Texas Congressma­n Michael Mccaul and Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton - urged the State and Commerce department­s to find a better way to “mitigate the risk of Taiwanese companies providing services and technologi­es to entities of concern,” adding that TSMC shouldn’t be making advanced chips for China’s military.

The South China Morning Post reported this week that TSMC suspended new orders from Tianjin Phytium Informatio­n Technology Co, one of the companies blackliste­d by the US, over concerns it’s involved either with building supercompu­ters used by China’s military actors, its military modernisat­ion efforts or weapons of mass destructio­n.

The Taiwanese chipmaker warned new measures adopted by China to counter US sanctions could affect its operations.

In January, China adopted a blocking statute that “entitled Chinese entities incurring damages from a multinatio­nal’s compliance with foreign laws to seek civil remedies,” it said.

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